Facing no discernible competition when its first eight volumes were released, Kompakt’s
Pop Ambient series monopolized the ambient-techno compilation field throughout most of the 2000s’ first decade. In the label’s eyes, Innervisions' Muting the Noise (2008) and Mule Electronic's Kompakt-distributed Enjoy the Silence (2009), featuring
Pop Ambient vets
Thomas Fehlmann and
DJ Koze, were likely seen as welcome, or even validating, releases -- extra assurance that their untiring support of ambient music has not been in isolation or vain. This particular volume of
Pop Ambient keeps the ever-shifting array of contributors in (slow) motion, mixing in relative newcomers with the establishment. The most pleasant surprise is the re-emergence of
Dettinger, who remixed
Pet Shop Boys' “Gomorrah” in 2006 but hadn’t released one of his own tracks since Pop Ambient 2002. His “Therefore” is typically soothing and unsettling, pitting a persistent jutting effect against cotton-soft drones. The lone true newcomer, Brock Van Wey (aka
Bvdub), closes the disc with the series’ lengthiest and most dramatic (and perhaps most 4AD-indebted) track yet, but his blissed-out “Lest You Forget,” earlier in the set, is as much of a highlight, possibly an homage to
Slowdive’s Pygmalion with its gently picked and strummed acoustic guitar, gentle atmospheric washes, and distant/heavily echoed vocal refrain. Other tracks leaving immediate and lasting impressions come from
the Orb, Andrew Thomas, and papa
Wolfgang Voigt. If the comparative value of each
Pop Ambient compilation is measured by the length of its lingering effect and sheer gorgeousness, this one comes pretty close to the 2002 and 2003 volumes. ~ Andy Kellman